Thursday, February 12, 2015

Sorting text in Word: 3 tips and some secret tricks


Basic sorting in Word 2013 is a breeze: Essentially, it’s just select a list of text, click the Sort button, and then choose Ascending or Descending order. However, it gets a bit more complex when sorting multiple columns or tables. There are a few tricks and relatively unknown techniques that can save you time and make this task easier. 

Sorting multiple columns

Sorting multiple columns is the same process as sorting a list: Just click the Sort button. Word automatically highlights all the columns and sorts them consecutively in the order you specify.
Trick: When sorting the columns individually (that is, treating each column as an independent list), you must select the text in each column separately—one at a time—and then click the Sort button.
Also, you must specify the data you’re sorting—text, dates, or numbers. The good news is that Word generally knows the data format and selects it for you.
sort columns JD Sartain

Taming table sorts

Sorting all the columns of data inside a table does not work the same way as lists or columns. If you just click the Sort button, believe me, very strange things happen.
For tables, you must highlight the entire table, which reveals two new tabs on the ribbon bar: Design and Layout. Click Layout > Sort; choose the column you want to sort by in the Sort By field box; check Ascending or Descending, then click OK.
Trick: Manually selecting text can be cumbersome. Try this instead: Position your cursor over the first table column (above and outside the table). When the black arrow appears, click once, then hold down the Shift key and click above the remaining columns until the entire table is highlighted.
2 sort table column
Sorting a single column inside a table is slightly more complicated. For example: Click the column you want sorted, then click Layout > Sort. The highlighted column you just selected is automatically listed in the Sort By field box, plus the Type (Text) and order (Ascending) is also automatically selected.
Secret warning: At this point, if you just click OK, the entire table is rearranged, but not really sorted. The selected column sorts in the order you specified (sometimes), but the other columns in the table are just randomly rearranged, resulting in a real mess.
Now what! Click Undo and read on.
The next step, unfortunately, is not intuitive. Word requires multiple sorts for this option to work properly. First, you must check the Sort Column Only box under Layout > Sort > Options > Sort Options. But once you check this box, then click OK, and OK again, the column you selected is rearranged, but not sorted. Now you have to sort it again, because Word can’t (or won’t) perform this function in a single step.
Secret trick: Try this: Position your cursor in the top, right margin (outside the table) and, when the black arrow appears, click once. Word displays a column of small gray boxes (intended for the addition of a new column). Now click Layout > Sort > Options > Sort Options and check the Sort Column Only box. Click OK, then OK again. Nothing changes (or so it seems), but the Sort Column Only box is now checked, which is necessary to proceed.
sort table trick, sort options JD Sartain
And now, it works. Click the column you want sorted—in this case, the center column (as explained above)—then just click Sort > OK. This step sorts the center column alphabetically in ascending order and does not rearrange the data in the rest of the table.
Trick: Imagine that after you’ve sorted the table, you decide to put your home state of California first on the list. Rather than manually adjusting the data, you can quickly move any row up or down with a simple shortcut. Position your cursor on the California row. Press Shift+ Alt+ Up-arrow continuously until California is moved to the first row (or Shift+ Alt+ Down-arrow to move the row down).
Note: The Sort Column Only box remains checked until you exit Word, then it reverts back to the default of “unchecked.” So you must repeat these last two steps to sort a single column inside a table of multiple columns each time you access Word.

Saturday, February 7, 2015

The first Ubuntu Phone is finally launching next week





Canonical is launching the first Ubuntu smartphone after a year of promises, though it’s unclear why anybody but hardcore Ubuntu aficionados would want one.
The BQ Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu edition will go on sale next week, but will only be available via “flash sales” with limited availability. It’ll cost 169.90 Euros, which translates to roughly $190.
At that price, you can’t expect much in specs department. The Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu edition will have a 4.5-inch display with 540-by-960 resolution, a 1.3GHz quad-core MediaTek chip, 8GB of storage (with MicroSD expansion), 1GB of RAM, and a 5-megapixel camera. The phone will have dual SIM slots, but won’t support 4G LTE networks.
As for software, Ubuntu says the interface removes the emphasis on apps—probably because it has very few apps—and instead offers themed panels called “Scopes.” Users can swipe between Scopes for news, music, videos, contacts, and nearby points of interest, in theory saving you from having to dive into traditional apps. (Now’s the time where Android users can point out the numerous custom home screens that serve similar purposes.)
That said, Canonical is promising apps from Facebook, Twitter, Dropbox, Evernote, and Amazon, among others. Some will be native Ubuntu apps, while others will be based on HTML5. If any of this sounds interesting, Canonical says it will announce the flash sales through the Ubuntu Twitter, Facebook and Google+ pages starting next week.
Why this matters: This Ubuntu phone is a far cry from the high-end Ubuntu Edge that failed to hit its crowdfunding goals in 2013. While the Edge had the intriguing ability to power an entire desktop version of Linux, the Aquaris E4.5 is entirely different, competing with other low-cost devices like the Moto G, cheap Lumia handsets and phones running Firefox OS. Winning people over won’t be easy, but the launch is still a big milestone for Canonical as it tries to crack into mobile for the first time.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Enter Windows 8 Safe Mode when you can't boot Windows 8




 If Windows 8 won’t boot normally, it probably won’t boot into Safe Mode, either. You can try the trick of repeatedly pressing and releasing F8 (described in my previous article), but it seldom works with Windows 8.
So what can you do? You have to fix the problem that’s keeping your PC from booting at all. Then, once Windows 8 can boot, you can reboot it into Safe Mode (if you still need to).


The trick is to create a recovery drive, and boot from that. It’s best to do this on your PC before you have a problem. A recovery drive created on another Windows 8 PC might work, but it might not.
Follow these instructions. You’ll need an empty flash drive, or at least one that contains nothing that you want to keep.
  1. Insert the flash drive into one of your PC’s USB ports.
  2. In Windows’ Search charm, type recovery, and select Create a recovery drive.
  3. Follow the wizard. If you’re not using your own computer, or if your flash drive holds less than 8GB, do not check “Copy the recovery partition from the PC to the recovery drive.”
Try booting from the flash drive. You may need to go into your BIOS setup and tell it to try booting from the flash drive before it tries booting from the internal drive. Your computer almost certainly uses UEFI, which in most cases isn't a problem because it probably supports BIOS boots as well.
Once successfully booted, the recovery drive will ask you to select a keyboard layout. On the next page, titled “Choose an option,” select Troubleshoot.
On the Troubleshoot page, select Advanced options.
Once there, try Startup Repair. If that doesn’t work, try System Restore. Chances are that one of these will work, and when it does, you will probably not need to enter Safe Mode.
In the worst-case scenario, you’d have to use System Image Recovery or reinstall Windows. If you have to do one of these, Safe Mode wouldn’t have helped you anyway. 


Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Next iPhone chip will reportedly be made by Samsung


Samsung may be one of its biggest competitors, but Apple is again turning to the South Korean company to get chips made for the iPhone, according to a report.
Samsung will make Apple’s next chip, which will likely be called the A9, in its newest factories running on the 14-nanometer manufacturing process, according to a news report in Re/code, which cited anonymous sources familiar with the matter.
Apple designs its mobile chips in-house, but gets them made through contract manufacturers. In the past, Apple has turned to Samsung for most of its iPhone chips, but the most recent A8 chip in the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus were made by TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.).
Samsung will be able to supply large volumes of low-power, high-speed chips for the iPhones and iPads. Apple likes using the latest and greatest technologies available, and Samsung’s factories would be a more advanced option than the facilities provided by TSMC, which is having trouble transitioning to its 16-nanometer process.
The news could also shut the door on rumors that Apple will turn to Intel to make its mobile chips. Intel also uses the 14-nanometer process to make its chips, but it has a head-start over Samsung in 3D transistor stacking technology, which provides the power-efficiency and speed benefits seen in smartphones and tablets.
Samsung has said it expected to start rolling out 14-nanometer chips in volume by the end of last year. Samsung invested 15.6 trillion Korean won (around $14 billion) more last year in new factories to make chips for mobile devices and industrial equipment. GlobalFoundries could also get involved in manufacturing iPhone chips as it has licensed Samsung’s 14-nanometer process technology for implementation in factories.
The competition between Apple and Samsung in the smartphone and tablet markets has been not only intense but also contentious: the companies have sued each other. Apple’s iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus have been runaway successes, and Samsung hopes to make magic with the Galaxy S6, which it may reveal at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next month.

BlueStacks

Bluestacks is an American mobile company that produces the BlueStacks App Player and the GamePop microconsole. Both products are designed to enable Android applications to run on Windows PCs, Macintosh computers and televisions.


Preview release 0.9.6.4092 / November 2014 (3 months ago)
Development status Active
Operating system Windows XP or later; Mac OS X Snow Leopard or later
Platform x86
Size 196 MB
Available in 16 languages
Type Virtual machine, Android emulator
License Trialware